Description:
  Edmund White majored in sexual explicitness with his boldly autobiographical trilogy--A Boy's Own Story, The  Beautiful Room Is Empty, and The Farewell Symphony.  Now, explicitly as ever, he trains his unflinching eye on a new  subject: a young man's death from AIDS. Austin is a fiftysomething American  expat in Paris; Julien is a young married man he meets at the gym. Much  to Austin's surprise, Julien calls him and soon they are sharing a bed  and a life. The Married Man is White's Henry James novel: the  first couple hundred pages show us a satirical portrait of young  Julien as a stuffy Frenchman and a more elliptical portrait of Austin's apprehension of French culture through his lover. With Julien, "Austin was always learning things, not necessarily reasoned or  researched information but rather all those thousands and thousands of  brand names, turns of phrase, aversions and anecdotes that make up a  culture as surely as do the moves in a child's game of hopscotch."    But White wants to take us all the way to the end of this relationship. Austin is HIV positive, and it soon becomes clear that Julien has AIDS.  As Julien's health unravels, the two travel to Providence, to Key West,  to Venice, to Rome, and ultimately to Morocco. The author coins a  darkly appropriate phrase for this urge to move: he calls it  "AIDS-restlessness." White, in fact, unveils a whole gallery of startling  images as Julien nears death. Julien is "the bowler hat descending into  the live volcano." Thin and brown and bearded, he looks "like the  Ottoman Empire in a turn-of-the-century political cartoon." Though he  can't read it, Julien acquires a copy of the Koran. "It was the perfect  book for a weary, dying man--pious, incomprehensible pages to strum, an  ink cloud of unknowing." White has found a language both magical and  clinical to describe a horrible death. --Claire Dederer
  |